Like online travel sites grappling with a glut of TV advertising in 2014, Norwegian Cruise Line CEO Kevin Sheehan laments the fact that his two larger rivals, Carnival and Royal Caribbean, are currently filling the airwaves with commercials.

He added that if the current environment were a little less competitive then that would be positive for NCL.

Sheehan noted that 13-ship Norwegian has to compete against “two great corporations,” namely the Carnival and Royal Caribbean.

“Everyone’s doing the same things,” Sheehan said, referring to TV advertising and discounting.

Sheehan said in the first quarter of 2014 NCL has adjusted pricing, where needed, including for its newest ship, the Norwegian Getaway, which began its first revenue cruises from Miami this month.

Sheehan doesn’t put it in these precise words, but he wishes the cruise industry would stop all of the current discounting that’s going on.

Sheehan said NCL and the cruise industry as a whole are still feeling the impact of recent “incidents” (i.e. Costa Concordia, Carnival Triumph and norovirus outbreaks), although he points out that NCL managed to beat earnings expectations in 2013, its first year as a public company.

Of the peak and all-important Wave season, Sheehan said at this point in the first quarter the industry is starting to see positive signs, and NCL is beginning to feel “better” about trends “as we go through each week now.”

One analyst opined that Norwegian has a “better” product than competitors, but asked when would NCL be able to take advantage of that?

Sheehan said NCL has been waiting to do that for several years, but adverse developments across the industry always intervene, and the cruise line becomes subject to the sway of competitors’ pricing.